BAGHDAD (AFP) - Iran could do more to help end violence in Iraq, the US military said on Wednesday, calling on Tehran to use its influence to help end lawlessness in the southern city of Basra.
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BAGHDAD (AFP) - Iran could do more to help end violence in Iraq, the US military said on Wednesday, calling on Tehran to use its influence to help end lawlessness in the southern city of Basra.
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Foreign Minister Manouchehr Mottaki says in a letter to U.N. officials obtained Wednesday by The Associated Press that Iran will not obey Security Council resolutions ordering that it suspend uranium enrichment because the body's actions are inconsistent with the U.N. Charter. The council imposed limited sanctions in December 2006 and has been ratcheting them up in hopes of getting Iran to halt enrichment and start negotiations on its nuclear program.
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Tehran is trying to enrich uranium to weapons-grade levels, he says. |
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BEIRUT
-- Vice President Dick Cheney charged in an
interview released Tuesday that Iran is
trying to develop weapons-grade uranium,
though international inspectors and U.S.
intelligence services have not found
evidence of such an effort. "Obviously,
they're also heavily involved in trying to
develop nuclear weapons enrichment, the
enrichment of uranium to weapons-grade
levels," Cheney said, according to a
transcript released by the White House of an
interview done Monday in Turkey with ABC's
Martha Raddatz. |
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Iran’s leading feminist magazine, Zanan, has had its publishing licence revoked by the Ministry of Culture. The magazine, which was first published in 1992, offered articles on health, parenting, literature, as well as politics, but it was recently seen to have shown Iranian women in ‘a black light’. Jenni talks to Dr Mehri Honarbin Holliday from Canterbury Christ Church University and Baria Alamuddin, Foreign Editor of Al Hayat - an independent Arab newspaper about the influence of the magazine on women in Iran, the effect that the closure of the magazine will have on women’s rights and women’s role in the forthcoming parliamentary elections |
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TEHRAN (AFP) - Twenty-seven people were killed when a bus overturned in southern Iran, state television reported on Tuesday, the latest crash on the country's hazardous roads. The accident, which occurred on Monday evening in the province of Khuzestan, also left 15 people injured.Since the start of the Iranian new year holidays last Thursday and the increase in traffic as Iranians take to the roads, there have been reports of scores of fatal accidents.In the first three days of the holidays alone, 70 people were killed in road accidents throughout the country, the official news agency IRNA quoted deputy traffic police chief Hadi Hashemi as saying on Saturday.Iran's roads are among the most dangerous in the world. At least 100,000 people in the country of 70 million have died in road accidents over the past five years.
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